How to make perfume
last longer.
Nine techniques that actually work. Which myths to retire. And the industry's whispered truth: an extrait at 33 percent will outlast an eau de toilette doing everything else wrong.
The Direct Answer
To make perfume last longer: apply to moisturised skin straight after a shower, use an unscented moisturiser or a thin layer of plain balm as a base, spray pulse points and torso rather than drenching one spot, mist clothing and hair from a distance, never rub your wrists together, store the bottle away from light and heat, and — the one the industry whispers — buy a higher concentration in the first place.
An extrait de parfum will outlast an eau de toilette doing everything else wrong.
Now the detail, including the myths you can stop performing.
Start With Skin, Not Spray
Fragrance clings to moisture and slides off dryness. Skin fresh from a shower, still slightly damp and then moisturised with something unscented, holds a composition for hours longer than dry skin ever will. If your perfume vanishes by lunch, the problem is usually your canvas, not your bottle.
Where to Spray
Pulse points work because warmth diffuses scent: neck, wrists, inner elbows, behind the ears, the chest. But the real technique is coverage over concentration. Multiple light sprays across multiple areas build a scent around you that renews itself as you move, where eight sprays on one wrist just burns bright and dies young.
Our atomisers are deliberately ultra-fine for exactly this reason.
The Rubbing Myth, Retired
Never rub your wrists together. Friction heats the skin and crushes the fragile top notes, making the composition arrive out of order — like reading the last page of a book first. Spray, then leave it alone.
Patience is the cheapest fixative in perfumery.
Fabric and Hair — The Long Game
Fibre holds fragrance far longer than skin, sometimes days. A light mist on a scarf, a jacket lining, or the hem of a shirt becomes a slow-release version of your scent.
For hair, spray from thirty centimetres away or mist a hairbrush first, since the alcohol in fragrance can be drying at close range. One caveat: oils and deep ambers can mark delicate pale fabrics, so aim for lining and underside seams with anything dark.
Storage — Where Perfume Goes to Die
Ultraviolet light and heat are the two fastest killers of a fragrance. The bathroom windowsill, beloved of every influencer shelf, is a crime scene. Keep bottles in a cool, dark place, ideally the original box.
And after a bottle travels, let it rest two or three days somewhere cool and dark before the first spray; temperature swings in transit temporarily flatten a formula, and rest restores its depth.
The Structural Answer — Concentration
Everything above is technique. The biggest lever is chemistry. Eau de toilette holds roughly 5 to 15 percent fragrance oil, eau de parfum 15 to 20, and extrait de parfum 20 to 40. More oil and less alcohol means slower evaporation, a closer, richer projection, and hours more life on skin.
It's why we bottle every Spiteful August fragrance — Bohemia, Coya, and Cárda — exclusively as extraits at 33 percent concentrate. We'd rather you spray less of something that lasts than bathe in something that quits by three o'clock.
If you've never worn extrait strength, The August Collective discovery set is the low-risk introduction: 5ml of all three for €40, with a €40 credit toward your first full bottle. For the concentration story in full, read our Extrait vs Eau de Parfum guide.
What Doesn't Work
Vaseline as a base works but can dull sparkling top notes — so use it sparingly if at all. Spraying into the air and walking through it wastes most of the liquid on your carpet. And layering a cheap body spray underneath a fine fragrance doesn't extend it — it just introduces the two and hopes they get along.
They rarely do.
Common questions
Why does my perfume fade so quickly?
Usually dry skin, low fragrance concentration, or both. Apply to moisturised skin and consider eau de parfum or extrait de parfum strengths, which contain more fragrance oil.
Does spraying perfume on clothes make it last longer?
Yes. Fabric holds scent longer than skin, often by many hours. Mist lightly from a distance and avoid delicate pale fabrics with dark, oil-rich fragrances.
What perfume concentration lasts longest?
Extrait de parfum, at roughly 20 to 40 percent fragrance oil. All Spiteful August fragrances are extraits at 33 percent concentration.
Should I rub perfume into my skin?
No. Rubbing generates heat and friction that damage the top notes and distort how the fragrance develops. Spray and let it dry naturally.